일정: Mon / Wed / Fri / Sat / Sun 11 am - 9 pm | Thu 11 am - 11 pm
티켓: 15 €
위치: Centre Pompidou
주소: Place Georges-Pompidou
Born in 1929 in the small village of Asnières-sur-Vègre in the Pays de la Loire Region, Bernard Réquichot was one of the most important protagonists of art in France of the 1950s. A short and tormented life - the artist committed suicide in 1961 at just 32 years old - in which Réquichot nevertheless stood out as one of the most prominent representatives of Informal Art. His artistic production was expressed in just over 6 years between 1955 and 1961. Réquichot, in the context of an artistic scene where gestural and material abstraction occupies a dominant place, pushes his painting beyond all limits. In his paintings the material is mixed with the knife. Inextricable networks, graphic traces invade the canvas. The young French artist works by stratifying his artworks, introduces collage into his painting, creates almost hypnotic sequences with spiral graphic motifs where black ink and white tempera give shape to illegible writings that recall his literary production. Misunderstood genius, avant-garde without a school, a lonely man tortured by his own ghosts, today Réquichot is celebrated in a large monographic exhibition at the Centre Pompidou.
To celebrate the centenary of the artist's birth, Ellsworth Kelly, Shapes and Colors, 1949-2015 will be the first exhibition in France to offer a broad overview of the work of this important artist of the second half of the 20th century.
250 new works presented during this second staging, the exhibition traces, through the museum's collections, a history of fashion from the 18th century to the present day and develops the transversal theme of the body in movement.
The MAM opens its doors to Ari Marcopoulos, skateboarder, photographer and director of the New York underground. His work Brown Bag is presented in a site-specific installation. Marcopoulos also offers a rereading of some works from the museum's collections, through the prism of the countercultures so familiar to him.
Tina Barney is an American photographer best known for her large-scale color portraits of her family and close friends in New York and New England. A retrospective at the Jeu de Paume in Paris celebrates 50 years of her career.